Monarch Charles Receives Medical Treatment for Prostate Condition at U.K. Hospital

Monarch Charles Receives Medical Treatment for Prostate Condition at U.K. Hospital


King Charles⁣ III has been admitted to a London hospital for a procedure⁣ to treat an enlarged prostate, Buckingham Palace confirmed on Friday.

Charles ‌arrived at the London Clinic, a ⁤private hospital, where his daughter-in-law Catherine,‍ Princess of Wales, is recovering from abdominal surgery.

The palace announced the king’s pending treatment last week shortly after the news that Catherine, Prince ⁤William’s wife, had undergone surgery in London. Her office ⁢in Kensington Palace said ⁣she⁤ would remain in the ​hospital⁣ for⁤ 10 to 14 days to recover.

The king’s recovery is expected to be much swifter, though the palace did not say how long he was expected to stay in the hospital. By announcing ​his elective prostate procedure in advance, the ⁤palace said, Charles, 75, hoped to encourage other men⁣ with similar symptoms to⁤ get checked.

“The ‍king was this ‍morning admitted to a London hospital for⁤ scheduled treatment,”⁤ the palace⁢ said in a statement. ​“His Majesty would like to thank ⁤all those who sent their ‌good ‌wishes⁣ over ​the past week, ​and ⁢is delighted to learn the diagnosis ​is ⁤having a positive impact on public health awareness.”

Benign prostate enlargement is common ​in men over ‌age 50, according to Britain’s National Health Service.⁣ It can be found in ⁤up to 90 percent of men over 70. Symptoms include difficulty‌ urinating and urgency to urinate. It is not cancerous and ⁢it‌ does not‍ usually pose a serious health⁣ threat.

Treatment includes medication and changes to diet and lifestyle, as well as surgical procedures in more severe cases to remove​ excess ⁤tissue from the prostate gland. Buckingham Palace did not describe the procedure that Charles would undergo.

Medical experts said that the⁣ most common treatment was a transurethral resection of the prostate, in which a surgeon scrapes out the inside of the prostate gland, ⁢giving the urethra more ⁣space.

Charles’s planned treatment follows a period of troubling health news for the British royal family. In addition to Catherine, Sarah ‍Ferguson, Duchess of‌ York and ex-wife of the king’s younger brother, Prince Andrew, said on Monday that she‌ had been ⁣diagnosed with melanoma, a serious type of skin cancer.

It was her second⁣ cancer diagnosis within ⁣a year. Ms. Ferguson, 64, had spoken publicly about her decision to ⁢undergo a mastectomy and⁣ reconstructive surgery last year after a breast cancer diagnosis in the summer.

The London Clinic, an elite private institution in the Marylebone neighborhood of London, has treated other members of‌ the ​royal family, as well as celebrities like the actress Elizabeth Taylor and foreign leaders like the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. John F. Kennedy, the future president, was told ​by doctors he had Addison’s disease while a patient at the hospital in 1947.

2024-01-26 05:06:00
Source from www.nytimes.com

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